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  • The Week Evening Review
    Trump's battle against a CEO, a progressive mayoral candidate, and an anti-trans literary scandal

     
    today's big question

    Why is Trump attacking Intel's CEO?

    The chip-making industry is at the heart of America's rivalry with China. That may be why President Donald Trump last week called on Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan to resign from his position.

    Trump's decision to put Tan in the spotlight came after Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) raised concerns that the CEO's interests include firms "linked to the Chinese Communist Party," said The Associated Press. Tan is "highly conflicted and must resign immediately," Trump said on Truth Social. Tan responded that he has "always operated within the highest legal and ethical standards."

    Intel is "beleaguered" after missing out on the "mobile qand AI boom," said CNN. Tan became CEO in March with a mission to "revive" the company as a "faster-moving, flatter and more agile organization." But he also has "personally and through various venture funds invested in hundreds of Chinese companies," including those connected to the Chinese military. That led Cotton and other Republicans to question Intel's "impact on U.S. national security."

    What did the commentators say?
    Intel "owes us answers about its CEO," said Dave Lee at Bloomberg. The company has a right to feel aggrieved to be under scrutiny at the same time that Trump is "controversially loosening export controls on high-end" Nvidia chips being sold to China. 

    At the same time, the "question of Tan's investments" should have been a "significant focus of the board" when it decided to hire him, said Lee. Intel received $8 billion from the government under President Joe Biden's CHIPS and Science Act, making it a "stakeholder deserving of transparency and reassurance."

    The company "must not bow" to Trump's demands, said Michael Moritz at the Financial Times. The Malaysia-born Tan is a "much-admired figure in Silicon Valley" and a longtime American citizen. There's no one "better equipped to transform Intel's fortunes." Intel needs to move forward, and the "last thing Tan needs is to be distracted by a vindictive political sideshow."

    What next?
    Trump's attack on Tan "could compound" Intel's struggles to determine its future, said The New York Times. The company is behind schedule on a new Ohio factory that would help it shift chip production from Asia to the U.S. However the controversy with Trump and Tan ends, "we need an American company to make American chips on American soil," said Sen. Jon Husted (R-Ohio).

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    'I would feel like the luckiest kid in all of history.'

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, 40, on how he would feel if he were just graduating from college, in a Huge Conversations podcast interview with Cleo Abram. Altman's comments come at a time when recent graduates face a fractured job market because of AI.

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    The push for a progressive mayor arrives in Seattle

    Zohran Mamdani's swift victory in New York City's Democratic primary has led to a wave of momentum for progressive candidates in other cities, and the trend has now reached the other side of the country. Seattle's upcoming mayoral race has been whittled down to two candidates, one of whom, Katie Wilson, shares a similar platform and template to Mamdani's. And while Seattle won't head to the polls until November, experts are pointing to Wilson's candidacy as an example of the progressive "Mamdani effect" taking hold.

    Who are the candidates?
    Wilson is the co-founder and head of the Transit Riders Union, a group working to improve public transportation in Seattle. Her mayoral campaign is her first foray into electoral politics, and she has campaigned on a strongly progressive platform, including her "involvement in past efforts to raise the minimum wage, tax large corporations, improve public transit and provide stronger protections for renters," said Bloomberg. 

    She has also campaigned heavily on progressive solutions for homelessness, which remains pervasive in Seattle. Homelessness here is caused by a "severe shortage of affordable housing, the result of neoliberal underinvestment in subsidized housing, and a long history of exclusionary zoning," Wilson said in an op-ed for Seattle newspaper The Stranger. 

    Her opponent, incumbent Mayor Bruce Harrell, is a more moderate Democrat. He was originally "viewed as the overwhelming favorite," said The Seattle Times. But he came in second place to Wilson in the primary, even as he has "made the pitch to voters that he's the best" against President Donald Trump, "touting a recent lawsuit against the administration."

    What's the bigger picture? 
    No matter what happens, Wilson's popularity in Seattle "shows Zohran Mamdani is not alone" in a wave of progressivism, said The Nation. And like everything else in American politics, Trump may be playing an outsize role in voters' minds. Many of Seattle's numerous tech businesses have "lost trust among local voters as they take a more conciliatory approach to Trump in his second term," said Heather Weiner, a consultant with PowerHouse Strategic, to The Seattle Times.

    Progressive candidates "across the board" have "moved away from some of the harder-edge messages that turned off a lot of middle-of-the-road voters," Sandeep Kaushik, a political strategist, said to Bloomberg. The "affordability message is something that people feel broadly."

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    6.8 million: The number of WhatsApp accounts linked to online scams that were taken down in the first six months of 2025, according to the brand's parent company, Meta. These account deletions were part of a crackdown on WhatsApp scammers attempting to steal user information.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Anti-trans scandal roils major LGBTQ+ literary prize

    Since its launch in 2011, the U.K.'s Polari Prize has become one of the most prestigious LGBTQ+ literary awards in the world, amplifying and celebrating a generation of queer literature and authors. However, as the awards prepare for their 15th anniversary, the Polari Prize has been rocked by an unfolding controversy over nominee John Boyne, a self-described TERF, or trans-exclusionary radical feminist, who celebrated author J.K. Rowling's history of anti-trans bigotry in an essay for her birthday last month. In response to Boyne and his novel "Earth" being longlisted for this year's Polari, multiple nominees and judges have withdrawn their participation in the event.

    'Radically different positions'
    Boyne's inclusion attracted "negative attention" after the awards longlist was published on Aug. 1, said Assigned Media. And while the prize committee "addressed the controversy" in a statement acknowledging Boyne's anti-trans history, the group ultimately "fueled the flames" by defending his nomination. "We can at times hold radically different positions on substantive issues," the committee said in a statement, calling the ongoing controversy "one of those times."

    While the prize committee "might believe" that by maintaining Boyne's nomination it's being "inclusive of authors with differing beliefs," the transgender exclusionary movement is not a "healthy philosophical questioning of what gender means," said fellow Polari nominee Avi Ben-Zeev on Instagram. Still, while Ben-Zeev can "appreciate" other authors who have withdrawn themselves from the running, to do so himself "would mean erasing my trans story, my voice," he said. That, ultimately, would mean "letting transphobic ideologues win."

    'Rising anti-trans hatred'
    In addition to the 12 authors and two judges who have publicly withdrawn from participating in Polari, more than 800 authors and publishing industry figures have signed an open letter calling for Boyne's removal from the awards longlist. While his inclusion would have been "inappropriate and hurtful to the wider community of LGBTQ+ readers and writers" at any time, the letter's authors said, the fact that it's happening in the "context of rising anti-trans hatred and systematic exclusion of trans people from public life in the U.K. and across the world" is "inexcusable."

     
     

    Good day 🍽️

    … for home cooking. Preparing meals at home helps people lose more weight than eating premade or ultraprocessed food, according to a study from the U.K.'s University College London. Study participants who ate ultraprocessed food lost an average of 1% of their weight, while those who cooked lost 2%.

     
     

    Bad day 🕹️

    … for drone fliers. Pilots will now be allowed to fly commercial drones beyond their line of sight, the FAA has announced. While Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy lauded the decision, experts are concerned this will lead to more accidents in the sky and more drone collisions.

     
     
    Picture of the day

    Lunar illusion

    The Sturgeon Moon, the traditional name for the full Moon in August, rises over Istanbul's Galata Tower. At this time of year, when the orb is low on the horizon, it looks much bigger than usual.
    Yasin Akgul / AFP / Getty Images

     
     
    Puzzles

    Daily crossword

    Test your general knowledge with The Week's daily crossword, part of our puzzles section, which also includes sudoku and codewords

    Play here

     
     
    The Week recommends

    'Salt to Taste' by Marco Canora could change how you cook

    Successful simplicity in preparing food demands either minimal or standout ingredients, as well as precise technique and resourcefulness. Marco Canora's "Salt to Taste: The Keys to Confident, Delicious Cooking" (2009) traces the ways such simplicity materializes in Italian-inspired cooking.

    Generational wealth
    Canora is the chef-owner of New York City's Hearth restaurant, but his family hails from Tuscany, so "Salt to Taste" is riddled with the flavors of that central Italian region. Cacciucco is a seafood stew teeming with squid, clams, mussels and shrimp, its base piquant with tomato puree, white wine and dried oregano. 

    Tuscan kale, aka dinosaur or lacinato kale, also steps into the spotlight across the book. Its appearance predates the wrinkly vegetable's ubiquity so much so that Canora calls it "black cabbage."

    Comfort food
    Little in "Salt to Taste" exemplifies Canora's proficiency in showing you how to build flavor like his pasta e fagioli. You first warm pieces of bacon and either prosciutto or pancetta in olive oil, then when the meaty bits have rendered their fat, you add diced onions. Cook down, add chopped garlic, cook down, add fresh rosemary and sage, cook down, then add tomato paste and, yes, cook down more. 

    Tier upon tier of compounding flavor is established before broth and beans are added. Right before serving, you boil short pasta like ditalini or elbow macaroni and mix it into the soup. Finish with a nub of butter and a dusting of Parmigiano, giving you bowls of deep-seated comfort.

    Read more

     
     

    Poll watch

    Almost seven in 10 Ukrainians (69%) favor a negotiated end to the war as soon as possible, while 24% support fighting until victory, according to a Gallup survey. The result of the poll of 1,000 adults is a significant reversal from 2023, when only 27% favored a negotiated end to the war. 

     
     
    WORD OF THE DAY

    derecho

    A prolonged period of heavy windstorms that often produces significant damage. Derechos can occur anywhere but are most common in the central and eastern parts of the U.S. While rare, they tend to form around the summer months and can be as destructive as hurricane-force winds, according to the NOAA.

     
     
    INSTANT OPINION

    Today's best commentary

    'I'm actually surprised it didn't happen sooner'
    Keren Landman at The Atlantic
    When "gunfire pelted the Atlanta-based headquarters of the CDC" on Friday, the employees were "not particularly shocked," says Keren Landman. Public health workers have been "facing escalating hostility since the early days of the coronavirus pandemic." In the second Trump administration, "those attacks have become commonplace — the very selling points, even, that have helped a number of President Donald Trump's health appointees gain their positions." Workers are "still getting used to the idea that the danger has arrived."

    'Men like Jeffrey Epstein are everywhere and they almost always get away'
    Jens Ludwig at the Chicago Tribune
    As the Jeffrey Epstein case is "back in the news, people are shocked by the depraved details and light punishment handed out. The real shock is that anyone is shocked," says Jens Ludwig. These men "are everywhere." It's "tempting for families in affluent urban or suburban areas to think they are safe from all sorts of violence. They are not." One of the "most unusual things" about the Epstein case is that he "got sentenced to any time at all."

    'Lab-grown diamonds are testing the power of markets'
    Allison Schrager at Bloomberg
    The "popularity of lab-grown diamonds is making me question the beauty of markets," which is "their ability to place a value on pretty much anything," says Allison Schrager. It's the "diamond's scarcity (as well as some good marketing) that made the market large and valuable." Now, diamonds "can be made in a lab in not too much time, in just about any quantity." If the "supply of diamonds is unlimited, what's their value"?

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Nadia Croes, Scott Hocker, Anya Jaremko-Greenwold, Justin Klawans, Joel Mathis, Summer Meza, Rafi Schwartz and Anahi Valenzuela, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly and Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images / Reuters / AP; Joe Sohm / Visions of America / Universal Images Group via Getty Images; Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Penguin Random House
     

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